During the past five years a presumptive diagnosis of ocular chlamydial disease has been made in 90 patients consulting the outpatient department of Freiburg University Eye Clinic. The diagnosis was confirmed by different methods (giemsa stains, chlamydia cultures and serology, electron microscopy and histology) in 27 cases. The clinical spectrum included inclusion blennorrhea in newborns as well as inclusion conjunctivitis, TRIC keratoconjunctivitis and sporadic trachoma in adults. Presumably the incidence of the disease is much higher than indicated by our figures. We suspect a very high number of undiagnosed cases. These patients usually do not receive proper therapy (tetracyclin or erythromycin for at least three weeks) and their disease may run a protracted course with the risk of permanent eye damage.
Das epibulbäre Osteom ist ein angeborener gutartiger Tumor. In der Literatur finden sich bis heute 39 Fälle. Über 4 weitere Fälle, die in den letzten 3 Jahren in den Universitäts-Augenkliniken Freiburg, Hamburg, Marburg und München gesehen wurden, wird berichtet. Offenbar ist dieser Tumor nicht so selten, wie man bisher angenommen hatte. Die klinischen und histologischen Befunde sowie die pathogenetischen Deutungsmöglichkeiten werden diskutiert.
From 1987 to 1993, 21 patients who had undergone complicated cataract extraction that was associated with vitreous loss and transscleral suture fixation of the posterior-chamber lens (PC-IOL) in one eye (group A) and uncomplicated in-the-bag implantation of the PC-IOL in the fellow eye (group B) were followed prospectively. The follow-up period was 29.5 months (SD, +/- 17.0 months) in group A and 36.6 months (+/- 24.0 months) in group B. Visual acuity did not differ significantly between the two groups (P = 0.60, Wilcoxon test). In all, 17/21 patients in group A and 16/21 patients in group B achieved a visual acuity of > or = 20/40. Postoperative refractions measured in group A were +0.68 D more hyperopic than those measured in group B (P < 0.04). This result was consistent with the postoperative finding of a significantly deeper anterior chamber in group A (mean, 0.44 mm; P < 0.03). The accuracy of the desired postoperative refraction was poorer in group A. The risk for retinal detachment, cystoid macular edema, and intraocular pressure elevation was increased in patients who had had capsular defects and vitreous loss during cataract extraction. Nevertheless, transscleral suture fixation of PC-IOLs in patients with complicated cataract extractions associated with vitreous loss can give acceptable visual results. We recommend that +0.5 D be added to the calculated IOL power when severe complications require transscleral suture fixation of the PC-IOL during cataract extraction.
The authors report on two patients who presented with sudden loss of vision, due to irodocyclitis and retinochoroiditis in one patient and optic neuritis in the other. AIDS was diagnosed in both patients on the basis of a positive HIV antibody assay, lymphopenia, and a reduced helper-to-suppressor subset ratio. Soon afterwards, the patient with retinochoroiditis developed the full-blown picture of AIDS with cerebral involvement. Neither anticytomegaly treatment with DHPG nor triple therapy for toxoplasmosis was able to prevent the fatal course. The patient died within six months. In contrast, the patient with optic neuritis recovered full visual acuity. So far there has been no relapse, nor any opportunistic infection in other organs.